Hiroshi, a 16-year-old boy, has started living at Jouga Town, where a big river divides ex-downtown and new downtown. There are also some mysterious customs in the town. Though he enjoys his life at a new school, only Nemuru, class president, keeps a distance from him. One day, she suddenly tells him, “Don’t go to ex-downtown.” What will be there?

The small missionary school St. Angraecum is located deep within the forest. A young girl with a wounded heart, Suou, joined the beautiful girls at the secluded school. Due to a past incident, she had shut herself in, cutting off all contact with others aside from her family. She was attracted to the school because of its experimental ‘amitié’ system by which every new student was assigned a ‘friend’ based on their interview and written test results. These temporary friendships gradually turned to a faint feeling of love. In the midst of their calm daily lives, there was a mysterious disappearance of one of the school’s students… – Hau~ Omochikaeri~!

Flowers is an all-ages yuri title, so don’t go in expecting anything too steamy (think Sakura Trick). I’ve liked Innocent Grey’s works for years, but this seems like a risky move, especially if there’s no murder mystery element to it. Could alienate their fanbase. The opening still has the MANYO x Shimotsuki magic we’ve come to expect at least.

New phase of La’cryma’s Fortissimo. Contains 3 new scenarios for heroines: Sakura, Kurobane Sayuki, and Satomura Momiji with h-scenes. Moreover there are three new characters: Loki, Schwarzritter/Kurokishi (Black knight) and Himeshiro Kuri.

Kaihou Shoujo aka Liberation Maiden was originally a shooter for the Nintendo 3DS. As part of the Guild Series, it involved a collaboration between developer Level-5 (Dark Cloud 2, Dragon Quest VIII, Ni no Kuni) and game director Suda 51 (No More Heroes, Killer is Dead, Lily Bergamo) with animated cutscenes from studio Bones. SIN is the sequel to that story told in visual novel format.

This is more or less the same as the opening from the Xbox 360 version. The one key difference here is superior image quality. Contrary to popular belief though, this is not so much due to disc capacity but rather the fact that Sony offers a better solution for video compression. I will be quite amused if Microsoft, after making a switch to Blu-ray with Xbox One, still has their publishing partners using antiquated codecs.